Jun 26, 2026 5:28 AM -
Question: How can a person know that he has exhausted his entire measure? Or is this revealed only at the very end?
Answer: Only at the very end does a person discover that he has exhausted his entire measure and stands before Yam Suf (the final sea), which he must cross. This means that he has already gone through all the qualities and made all the discernments required during the period of preparation. Whenever someone cried out, “When will it happen? When?” Rabash would answer: “The Creator’s salvation comes in the blink of an eye.” Wait, it can happen at any moment.
Every next moment may be the decisive one. And every time you are filled with disappointment and despair yet continue searching for new strength in order to advance and reach the goal despite everything, it may happen that this time, instead of once again trying to move forward on your own and making use of new opportunities, you suddenly discover that you have nothing left. No more strength. No more means. You have reached the final sea, and all that remains is to cross it.
Question: But perhaps instead of constantly trying to find new strength and new means, would it be better to simply tell myself that I have exhausted everything, and reach a state of complete despair?
Answer: You cannot leave the path halfway and say: “I have tried everything. There is nothing more for me to do.” Because this point of faith above reason, the crossing of the final sea, is revealed precisely through your continued pressure and efforts to break through and move forward.
Usually, after a period of discouragement and disappointment, you begin to search for what else can be done. You do not know what to do, and it seems as though all possibilities have already been exhausted, and nothing remains. It is precisely this search, together with the inability to find any solution, that gives birth to a genuine demand, a true cry to the Creator.
And from that cry, the gates of holiness are opened.
[357928]
From the Daily Kabbalah Lesson 6/13/26, Rabash, “And the Lord Appeared to Him at the Oaks of Mamre”